Private Sector
The protection of the nation's
critical
infrastructure requires an effective partnership framework that fosters
integrated, collaborative engagement and interaction among public- and
private-sector partners.
Homeland Security
Presidential Directive 7 (HSPD-7) and the
National
Infrastructure Protection Plan (NIPP) provide the overarching framework for
a structured partnership between government and the private sector for
protection of critical infrastructure.
Please contact the Fusion Center (334 517-2660) to:
- Discuss threats and schedules for private sector meetings
- Report suspicious activity
Please contact the US DHS Protective Security Advisors (PSA) in order to schedule
vulnerability assessments or to discuss vulnerability and the private sector.
Mike Waters
michael.waters@dhs.gov
(334) 201-1988
Kirk Toth kirk.toth@dhs.gov
(850) 294-9300
18 Critical Infrastructure Sectors and Key Resources
Agriculture & Food
Alabama’s Agriculture and Food Sector has the capacity to feed and clothe people
well beyond the boundaries of our state. This sector is almost entirely under
private ownership with key points of important located at state and federal
government location around the state.
Alabama's agricultural outputs include poultry and eggs, cattle, plant nursery
items, peanuts, cotton, grains such as corn and sorghum, vegetables, milk,
soybeans, and peaches. Although known as "The Cotton State", Alabama ranks
between eighth and tenth in national cotton production, according to various
reports.
and is composed of an estimated 2.1 million farms, approximately 880,500 firms
and over one million facilities. This sector accounts for roughly one-fifth of
the nation's economic activity and is overseen at the federal level by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Health and Human
Services' (HHS) Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Defense Industrial Base
The Defense Industrial Base (DIB) Sector includes Department of Defense (DoD),
government, and the private sector worldwide industrial complex with the
capabilities of performing research and development, design, production,
delivery, and maintenance of military weapons systems, subsystems, components,
or parts to meet military requirements.
The DIB Sector includes tens of thousands of companies and their subcontractors
who perform under contract to DoD, and companies providing incidental materials
and services to DoD, as well as government-owned/contractor-operated and
government-owned/government-operated facilities. DIB companies include domestic
and foreign entities, with production assets located in many countries.
The DIB Sector is dependent upon a number of other sectors, such as Energy,
Communications and Transportation Systems.
Healthcare & Public Health
The Healthcare and Public Health Sector constitutes approximately 15 percent of
the gross national product with roughly 85 percent of the sector’s assets
privately owned and operated. Operating in all U.S. states, territories, and
tribal areas, the Healthcare and Public Health Sector plays a significant role
in response and recovery across all other sectors in the event of a natural or
manmade disaster.
While healthcare tends to be delivered and managed locally, the public-health
component of the sector, focused primarily on population health, is managed
across all levels of government—local, tribal, territorial, state, regional, and
national.
The Healthcare and Public Health Sector highly dependent on fellow sectors for
continuity of operations and service delivery including: Transportation Systems,
Agriculture and Food, Energy, Water, Emergency Services, Information Technology
and Communications.
National Monuments & Icons
The National Monuments and Icons (NM&I) Sector encompasses a diverse array of
assets located throughout the United States and its territories. While many of
these assets are listed in either the National Register of Historic Places or
the List of National Historic Landmarks, all share three common characteristics:
1.
They are a monument, physical structure, object,
or geographic site;
2. They are widely recognized to represent the nation's heritage, traditions, or
values, or widely recognized to represent important national cultural,
religious, historical, or political significance; and
3.
Their primary purpose is to memorialize or
represent some significant aspect of the nation's heritage, tradition, or
values, and to serve as points of interest for visitors and educational
activities.
Banking & Finance
The Banking and Finance Sector, the backbone of the world economy, is a large
and diverse sector primarily owned and operated by private entities. In 2007,
the sector accounted for more than 8.0 percent of the U.S. gross domestic
product.
This Sector consists of over 29,000 financial firms, including:
1.
Depository financial institutions
2.
Banks
3.
Thrifts
4.
Credit Unions
5.
Insurers
6.
Securities brokers/dealers
7.
Investment companies
8.
Certain financial utilities
Water
Homeland Security Presidential Directive-7 (HSPD-7) designates the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) as the federal lead for the Water Sector's critical
infrastructure protection activities. All activities are carried out in
consultation with the Department and the EPA's Water Sector partners.
Chemical
The Chemical Sector is an integral component of the U.S. economy, employing
nearly 1 million people, and earning revenues of more than $637 billion per
year. This sector can be divided into five main segments, based on the end
product produced:
1. Basic chemicals
2. Specialty chemicals
3. Agricultural chemicals
4. Pharmaceuticals
5. Consumer products
Commercial Facilities
Facilities associated with the Commercial Facilities Sector operate on the
principle of open public access, meaning that the general public can move freely
throughout these facilities without the deterrent of highly visible security
barriers. The majority of the facilities in this sector are privately owned and
operated, with minimal interaction with the federal government and other
regulatory entities.
The Commercial Facilities Sector consists of the following eight subsectors:
-
Public Assembly (e.g., arenas,
stadiums, aquariums, zoos, museums, convention centers);
-
Sports Leagues (e.g., professional
sports leagues and federations);
-
Gaming (e.g., casinos);
-
Lodging (e.g., hotels, motels,
conference centers);
-
Outdoor Events (e.g., theme and
amusement parks, fairs, campgrounds, parades);
-
Entertainment and Media (e.g.,
motion picture studios, broadcast media);
-
Real Estate (e.g.,
office/apartment buildings, condominiums, mixed-use facilities, self-storage);
and
-
Retail (e.g., retail centers and
districts, shopping malls).
Critical Manufacturing
Primary Metal Manufacturing
-
Iron and Steel Mills and Ferro
Alloy Manufacturing
-
Alumina and Aluminum Production
and Processing
-
Nonferrous Metal (except Aluminum)
Production and Processing
Machinery Manufacturing
-
Engine, Turbine, and Power
Transmission Equipment Manufacturing
Electrical Equipment, Appliance, and Component Manufacturing
-
Electrical Equipment Manufacturing
Transportation Equipment Manufacturing
-
Motor Vehicle Manufacturing
-
Aerospace Product and Parts
Manufacturing
-
Railroad Rolling Stock
Manufacturing
-
Other Transportation Equipment
Manufacturing
Dams
The Dams Sector comprises the assets, systems, networks, and functions related
to dam projects, navigation locks, levees, hurricane barriers, mine tailings
impoundments, or other similar water retention and/or control facilities. The
Dams Sector is a vital and beneficial part of the nation’s infrastructure and
continuously provides a wide range of economic, environmental, and social
benefits, including hydroelectric power, river navigation, water supply,
wildlife habitat, waste management, flood control, and recreation.
Energy
The U.S. energy infrastructure fuels the economy of the 21st century. Without a
stable energy supply, health and welfare is threatened and the U.S. economy
cannot function. More than 80 percent of the country's energy infrastructure is
owned by the private sector. The energy infrastructure is divided into three
interrelated segments:
• Electricity,
• Petroleum, and
• Natural gas
Nuclear Reactors, Material, & Waste
Nuclear power accounts for approximately 20 percent of the nation's electrical
use, provided by 104 commercial nuclear reactors licensed to operate in the
United States. The Nuclear Reactors, Materials, and Waste (Nuclear) Sector
includes: nuclear power plants; non-power nuclear reactors used for research,
testing, and training; nuclear materials used in medical, industrial, and
academic settings; nuclear fuel fabrication facilities; decommissioning
reactors; and the transportation, storage, and disposal of nuclear material and
waste.
Emergency Service
The Emergency Services Sector (ESS) is a system of response and recovery
elements that forms the nation's first line of defense and prevention and
reduction of consequences from any terrorist attack. It is a sector of trained
and tested personnel, plans, redundant systems, agreements, and pacts that
provide life safety and security services across the nation via the
First-Responder Community comprised of federal, state, local, tribal, and
private partners.
The ESS is representative of the following first-responder disciplines:
emergency management, emergency medical services, fire, hazardous material, law
enforcement, bomb squads, tactical operations/special weapons assault teams, and
search and rescue. All first-responders within the ESS are individuals
possessing specialized training from one or more of these disciplines.
Information Technology
The Information Technology (IT) Sector is central to the nation's security,
economy, and public health and safety. Businesses, governments, academia, and
private citizens are increasingly dependent upon IT Sector functions. These
virtual and distributed functions produce and provide hardware, software, and IT
systems and services, and—in collaboration with the Communications Sector —the
Internet.
Communications
The Communications Sector is an integral component of the U.S. economy as it
underlies the operations of all businesses, public safety organizations, and
government. Over 25 years, the sector has evolved from predominantly a provider
of voice services into a diverse, competitive, and interconnected industry using
terrestrial, satellite, and wireless transmission systems. The transmission of
these services has become interconnected; satellite, wireless, and wireline
providers depend on each other to carry and terminate their traffic and
companies routinely share facilities and technology to ensure interoperability.
Postal & Shipping
The Postal and Shipping Sector is an integral component of the U.S. economy,
employing more than 1.8 million people and earning direct revenues of more than
$213 billion per year. The Postal and Shipping Sector moves over 720 million
messages, products, and financial transactions each day.
Postal and shipping activity is differentiated from general cargo operations by
its focus on small- and medium-size packages and by service from millions of
senders to nearly 150 million destinations. The sector is highly concentrated,
with a handful of providers holding roughly 94 percent of the market share.
Transportation Systems
The nation's transportation system quickly, safely, and securely moves people
and goods through the country and overseas. The Transportation Systems Sector
consists of six key subsectors, or modes:
-
Aviation includes aircraft, air traffic control systems, and
approximately 450 commercial airports and 19,000 additional airfields. This mode
includes civil and joint use military airports, heliports, short takeoff and
landing ports, and seaplane bases.
-
Highway encompasses more than 4 million miles of roadways and
supporting infrastructure. Vehicles include automobiles, buses, motorcycles, and
all types of trucks.
-
Maritime Transportation
System consists of about 95,000 miles of
coastline, 361 ports, over 10,000 miles of navigable waterways, 3.4 million
square miles of Exclusive Economic Zone to secure, and intermodal landside
connections, which allow the various modes of transportation to move people and
goods to, from, and on the water.
-
Mass Transit includes multiple-occupancy vehicles, such as transit
buses, trolleybuses, vanpools, ferryboats, monorails, heavy (subway) and light
rail, automated guideway transit, inclined planes, and cable cars designed to
transport customers on local and regional routes.
-
Pipeline Systems include vast networks of pipeline that traverse hundreds
of thousands of miles throughout the country, carrying nearly all of the
Nation's natural gas and about 65 percent of hazardous liquids, as well as
various chemicals.
-
Rail consists of hundreds of railroads, more than 143,000
route-miles of track, more than 1.3 million freight cars, and roughly 20,000
locomotives.
Government Facilities
The Government Facilities Sector includes a wide variety of buildings, owned or
leased by federal, state, territorial, local or tribal governments, located
domestically and overseas. Many government facilities are open to the public for
business activities, commercial transactions, or recreational activities. Others
not open to the public contain highly sensitive information, materials,
processes, and equipment. This includes general-use office buildings and
special-use military installations, embassies, courthouses, national
laboratories, and structures that may house critical equipment and systems,
networks, and functions.
For more information, visit the US DHS critical infrastructure page.